more, eh!
On Tuesday Corinna took us to the town of Lüneburg. Apparently the locals once bought billions of metric tons of clay bricks on an
eBay auction. As with most
eBay purchases, they had no clue why they bought them or what to do with them. So they just piled them up to a brick theme park, including walls and buildings and even churches.
57: Guess what, a brick wall.
58: Red bricks. And apparently you are supposed to stand there and look out for secret information. I waited for 30 minutes but nothing happened, so I walked on.
59: Red bricks and windows.
60: Black bricks piled up into a building-like structure. Some of us tried drinking beer at those vertical tables in the foreground, but failed utterly and we quickly left all the broken glass behind.
61: Walking man and bricks (and a f a g (censorship? come on, it is a cigarette)). This fellow also had a metal pole sticking in his head. I suppose besides from being a smoker, he served also as some sort of mobile traffic sign.
62: Part of the TPF gang and bricks.
63: Chris taking pictures of some outstandingly nice bricks.
64: Bricks and chicks.
65: (No) bricks and chips. Some TPF people actually stole some of these from me since I was the only one clever enough to squeeze in a small snack!
66: Jeff taking a picture of the only brick free corner of Lüneburg.
67: Inside the mysterious church of bricks.
68: And there was actually a smaller brick church underneath the large church of bricks.
69: Bricks and glass.
70: More church windows, you can actually see some red brick walls shining through.
71: After quite a while in the underground of said church, we managed to climb up again.
72: Some of the buildings close to the church where painted, to disguise the fact, that it was all bricks anyway.
73: The market place (no bricks??).
74: Stasi 2.0 ... and apparently no bricks here!
75: Why must German be so complicated? In the UK this note would simply read "CCTV",
76: Back in time.